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BRITISH
RE -UNION ASSOCIATION
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
(By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
As dew upon the tender herb;
Diffusing fragrance round,
As showers that usher in the spring,
And cheer the thirsty ground,
So shall His presence bless our souls,
And shed a joyful light;
That hallowed morn shall chase away
The sorrows of the night.
John Morrison.
PRAYER
Almighty God, grant, we beseech
Thee, that ,strengthened by the
studying together of these lessons. we
may serve thee more faithfully day
by °day, and come at last to Thine
eternal kingdom. In Jesus' name we
pray. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR JUNE 29th, 1930
Lesson Topic—Review.
Lesson Passage—Ise. 2;2-4.
Golden Text—Matthew 16:16:
April 6th—The Law of the Cross.
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6
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4Y1
d.7
+e-aattliew 16:24.
In Orden to find Qut • what the dis-
,edpies, were thinking about , •hitnr. Jesus
Ingnired olio sperollle thought he was.
Trivet reply revealed that Ile was eer-
tainly-'soxne great one. When He
asked their private opinion Prater at
once, prompted from above, replied:
"Thou art the Ohrist." Jesus then
confided in them His life's purpose
and taught them that no crown worth
thetgaining could be had apart from
the cross. .
April 13th --,The Child and the King-
dom.
Matthew 18:1-6, 12-14; 19:13-15.
— Matthew 19:14.
Jesus by an object lesson taught
His disciples the true meaning of
being great in the kingdom of heaven.
It is the. person with the child heart
that is the greatest. And when the
disciples would have prevented the
mothers from 'bringing their children
to Him to be blessed He gave as His
reason for receiving' them their pr'e-
aieusness—"For of such is the king•
dom of heaven."
April 20th—Jesus Teaching Forgive-
ness.
—Matthew 18:21-35.
—Matthew 6:12.
or Easter Lesson—John 20 : 1-16;
Matt. 28:6:
'Eye -witnesses describe what took
place at the empty tomb and in to-
day's lesson we have John's account
of what he saw that caused him to be-
lieve in the resurrection, rHe was
then prepared for 'the story Mary
had to tell of her interview with the
angels and the Risen Lord. She gave
the Lord's message to the disciples
that is for all time the Eastee mes-
sage to all men.
April 27th—Giving 'Up All For the
Kingdom-
--Matthew-19:16-26.
—Matthew 6:20.
A young man approached Jesus in-
quiring what he must do to inherit
eternal life. •When he found he
would have to surrender his all for
the sake of discipleship, he turned
away sorrowful. Jesus then address-
ed himself to
His disciples saying
it was hard for a rich man to enter
heaven, meaning one whose chief
thought was for his worldly treasures.
Love for God and love for man opens
the door of heaven. God loved and
gave; Jesus loved and gave so we
must love and give..
May 4th—Promotion In The King-
do:at.
— Matthew 2.0:1;-28,
—Matthew 20:28.
After Jesus spoke of His finishing
His life -work, two of His disciples,
grasping the thought of His :rising
from the dead. thought it would be
suitable time to mention their secur-
ing the chief place in His kingdom to
bet set up after His resurrection.
Jesus made their approach to Him a
time for further revealing the law
greatness in I-iis kingdom. It was not
prfefel•rment by favoritism but by
humble service.
%lay 11th---Jesuss Acclaimed as King.
— Matthew 21:1-11,
— Matthew 21:9,
Jesus had made no provision ter II
entrance into Jerusalem as the Kin
of the Jews, but He knew where H
could get the necessary animals an
so his arrival was hailed by the peo
pile— men, women and children we
carried away and rendered Him ley
worship for a very : hort periled of
time. On hi, reaching the city the
whole place was '-moved and crier.
"I-Vho is this?"
May 18th—Jesus .Teaching ,In .The
Tem plc.
—Matthew 22:15-22, 3-1-40.
— },l att hcv: 22:37-39,
Whenever Christ was approached
by those anxious t:r catch Him up in
His task He always answered them in
such a way that they were si;enced
and went awry. frnm HHim. In thls
lesson we see Pharisees. Heradians,
Saducees and lawyers.'the intellectual
men of the age treated in that way.
May 25th—Jesus Describes the Fut-
....ure of the Kingdom.
—iMatthew 25:1-13.
—lark 13::13.
Jesus in His talks recognized only
two classes in. human life—the wise
and the foolish. In this lesson He
speaks of them as the wise virgins or
those filled with iiis spirit, and th
foolish virgins or those who have hu
the outward appearance whereas th
heart is empty of devotion to Him
Tune 1st—Contrast Between Faith
fulness and Slothfulness.
—Matthew 25:14-30,
—Matthew 25:21.
In this lesson the traveller is Christ
returning to heaven and the servants
are His followers, He gives gifts to
each and all and expects there will
be a gond use made of them. Those
who are gi!igent in husiness and fer-
vent in spirit will be rewarded in
ping made partakers of His joy.
Those- who are slothful will be pun -
shed and he excluded from that same
r' mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
eWilliams, Medicine Co., Brockville,;
gOnt.
-1
al "PULL" AND THE POLICE
The man who would
never walk again. .
Who could *anima more poignant story than
this? d champion athlete—bedridden. Told
that he could never walk again . - .. 1 And
then he took Kruschen.
lily doctor told my landlady that I could
never walk again. I had rheumatism set in
about Christmas -time, and was confined to
bed for two months.
I am nearly sixty years of age. After taking
six bottles 1 am starting to work next week.
' Up till two years ago I had been a Cham-
pion Racing Cyclist. I have won a prize every
time I have ridden. Being as athiete, but a
poor scholar, it would take me a week to write
the facts about S.ruschou Salts." —W. H. B.
Original tetter oaale for inspection.
Rrusehen Salts is obtainable at drug and
department stores inCanada at 760. a bottle.
A bottle contains enough to last for 4 or 5
half-wantmonths—good health for half -want a day.
them in Galilee. When He did they
received a command to teach all na-
tions and make disciples of them.
Time to Repair Barn.
The best time to do any of the
needed repair work on the barn or
buildings is in the late spring or early
summer. The hay mows are then
empty so that sills can be renewed,
posts moved if desired, changes made
in windows and -doors, ventilating
flues installed, and other needed equip-
ment put in. Having things handy
around the barn is•a great advantage
in lessening labor as well as in sav-
ing time.
STURDY CHILDHOOD
The sturdy child—thk bright, act-
ive little chap is the one everybody
loves. It is only the sickly. fretful
chid who is not attractive. It is the
birthright of every child to be sturdy
and well—to be able, to make every-
one
ver,-one admire him. Therefore, mothers,
if yours is not attractive it's your
fault. not his. He must be ailing
it is up to you to see that he
gets relief—that he is given a medi-
cine• that will quickly make him well
and keep him well,
Baby's Own Tablets are especially
designed for infants and young chil-
dren. There is nothing to equal
them for correcting the irregulari-
ties of the stumaeh and bowels—
the cause of most of the ills from
which little ones suffer. The Tablet.
are sold by medicine, dealers c,r by.
t
h
joy.
.lune Ath—,Jesus In The Shadow of
the Cross.
—Matthew 26:31-46,
--Matthew 26:39.
Jesus took His disciples into the
Garden with him to he on guard whilst
He prayer and they all failed Him.
Human sympathy was denied Him,
yut after the agony was past angels
ministered to Him. He prayed not
because He quailed before physical
pain hut because of the great sin
against the Father that was about to
he committed by the world. He
prayed that if possible that might be
averted,
June 15th—Jesus On The Cross.
=Matthew 27:33-50,
— tHiehrews 12:2.
Not only in the presence of His
persecutors during His trial bat on
the cross was ,Jesus mocked and jeer-
ed at. Yet under it all He was calm
and full of peace. The last hours of
agony were spent under a dark cloud
which hid Him from the gaze of the
unsympathetic on -looker. In His last
cry to Goci He showed. His perfect
trust under trial. It was "My -Cod,
My God."
June 22nd—The Risen Lord an: The
Great Commission.
—M thew 28:1-10, 16-20.
— atthew 2,8:19.
When the women came to the sep-
ulchre they were astonished to see it
open and an angel sitting on the stone
that had closed it. The angel told
them that Jesus had risen and sent
them to tell the disciples so. As
they went Jesus met them and •told
them to tell the disciplesHe'd meet
•
One of thewain reasons a•;'y the
^rime situation in Chicago .•cents so
!bad is that the ideals of the reforn
movement there are so high. 1 - Chi
sago they are comparing th ituation
not with what really is on e ii 1 h, in
London, or Paris, or Berlin. I"rt wit'i
hrry things are done in .,':r.e New
Jerusalem, In earthly cities, a'in:init-
trat.ion of the law by police 'a t.nhan-
pi'.y, in reality, always a ,bity busi-
ness, and always has beer, every•
where. Only in more easy-goip.,• cities,
they are content not to in.luis•e too
closely; to accept the pictuee of the
policernaa on his beat as the whole
thing, and to idyllize the' detective.
When, every ten years er eo, they:
have to clean nut the sanitary system
of society. which policing is, it le done
discreetly. No one is asked in to
•each. A con\ entional little s:• ry is
toade of it, open dismissals are re-
citic•ed to a minimum, and n r one, ev-
en the newspaper, questions t,:o deep-
ly or seeks to probe. The natural func •
tic•ns of s.• • v are performe 1. except.
ii. Chicsga, le hind a more or lees de-
cently decorative scene,
But since we must have compari-
son for estimation, it sh:,uld he un•
do -stood that in the policing of a
great city there are three dta les. Re-
pression ie the last. Control comes be-
fore it, arm information first of all.
the stool pigeon and the informer, that
i; to say, are the real machinery.
Whatever happen., a police chief
roust know what is going nn,in the un-
derworld—even if it is at the cost of
leaving crime unpunished. -'rimes are
bargained for; a sprat catches a
mackerel. firmretimes a mackerel is
used for shark -bait, and even a rharl:
of magnitude is not too bi.;• to give
tier a real killer -whale. A'.1 lii.kpock-
et,i, let us translate, are h'; no means
,tied at sight; and even ferries, those
receiver's of stolen goods who are the
vc 1 v economic foundation-, of the
criminal world, are sort -times dis-
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Gained 15 Lbs.'
"Gained 15 lbs, taking Ironized
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rfhct.;-,.•ds of 5 to 15 lbs.
gu pct 1 3 e -!:s ye;th Ironized
Yeast. Bony limbs round out. Ugly
hollows fill in. Blemished skin gets
clear and rosy like magic. Nervous-
ness, indi gesti on, constipation dis-
appear overnight. Sound sleep. New
,health and pep from very first day.
Two great tonics in one—special
weight.ibuilding Malt Yeast and
strengthening Iron. Pleasant little
tablets. Far stronger than unmedi-
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So quit being' ashamed of "skinni-
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quick results.
ereetly telerated, paying for immun-
ity Inith ev'hat an- optsider might think
very rensotely interestin information.
It may }nave happened o you, when
you had ,a friend in hig office in the
peliee ated you have bee robbed, and
then you have gone to your "pull."
.diad then- (how marvelous!) you have
received your property back in a sin-
gle week, in a night. There must be
some method at work hero triumph-
antly different from that of Sherlock
Holmes. Quite so. But in Paris, let us
say, you would, hardly be so indiscreet
as to deduce, what however is the,
truth, that all the fences and many of
the likely burglars have been tele-
phoned to, and yet trot at -rested.
Every now and then, in most peat
cities, emerges from these deep waters
some huge black mystery, on which
romance and fear hang their trap-
pings. The Beaker case or the Roth-
stein case in New York; the Phillippe
Daudet case in Paris; and so on.
What do you suppose is the terrible
information given to the man who is
sent by popular clamor to "clear it
all up," as soon as he has penetrated
into the innermost room, ,of such a
nature as to paralyze his force and
close his mouth? Not so often honor-
ed names and high ofli•cials' implica-
tion., I fancy, as a straightforward
explanation that a penal solution
would wreck a huge web of police sys-
tem, uncovering in -dispensable pivots
of spying, destroying whole regions
of the defense system of society which
it would take years, during which the
worst might happen, to build up
again. The French have a name for
such affairs., crimes policiers.
For the last of these typical out-
crops, these symptoms, I suggestY ou
consider that :interminable complaint
of ex-convicts—that the police never
let them at peace when they have
found honest work. Well,'in the par-
tial degree to which it is truth, this
has als-o something to do with tha
matter. Cellars and sewers are neces•
sary and useful, but they can never
be kept as clean as a drawing room.
The classic method, of course, is not
simple, any more than it is direct. It
shades all the way from scientific de-
tection, to spying and wire -tapping;
then paid information, tolerance, com-
pensatory complicity, of which you
will not alter the value by calling the
hard name of "compounding a felony,"
perhaps sometimes, surely rarely, to
a little quiet instigation. But only the
very, very zealous and confident po-
lice forces would dare to use that.
It is in an understanding of this
"implicit necessary" that such phrases
as that of Chief 'Vollmer of Berkeley
—now of the Department of Crimin-
ology of the University of Chicago—
"E''ery drug peddler is a policeman
[scilicet: an informer]" are to be tak-
en. The heraldic crest of the under-
world is a double -Bross. The police
laboratory, the use of science to fur-
ther the ends of justice—their princi-
pal employment is to catch the ama-
teur and the first offender. Another
system deals with all the rest.
But for the full employment of this
ysteni, it is necessary- to have a ruth-
less as well .0 intelligent chief, and
to leave him alone. This the Chicago
thirst for perfection cannot, of course,
f.o. No major city police force in the
world is so constantly supervised, s)
continuously inspected and ee cramp-
ed in its play by a high moral code.
The merest routine actions of Scotland
Yard would be on the front I age of
Chicago newspapers; and look pretty
bars, too.
Now it may be to this that is at-
; tribute(' some of the insucces, of po-
li.e wot'k in Chicago, That ineuccess
has of course been distorted. Figures
have been emir posed and hastily
broadcast, for sneering comparison
. with those. compiled on quite another
basis, of ether, especially European
cities. 1 have the authority of Chief
Vollmer in saying that police statis-
tics are so irregularly compiled over'
the world that no valuable compari-
sons whatever can he drawn from
them, A much more precise intl,ex of
police efficiency in Chicago co'rl.l be
taken from those rates quoted by in-
surance companies who buy the risk
to ptoeerty from robbery and fraud,
In this' list, the risk in at least four
other great American cities is set
down as greater than in Chicago.
Again. though the figures for gang
killings are well known over the whole
world, and are always followed by the
mention that no conviction, or an ab-
surdly inadequate number of convic-
tions followed, yet so far as 1 know
no newspaper has ever accompanied
this information with the surely pert-
inent figures of those killed by the
police on the spot. Surely it adds a
different complexion to such wel:
known statistics as these: Gang kill-
ings, 1926-74; 1927-56; no ceovic-
tions—if you add: Criminals shot by
police, 1926-43; 1927-46. And also
one might well paste on Arthur Lash-
ly's sage remarks: "When gangsters
kill, they kill each other. Though there
have been on convictions for such
murders. such crimes are seldon, eoly•
ed in any large city."
The large discrepancy between
charges and convictions for all of-
fenses in the courts, let it be said in
passing, is surely just as indicative
of a too zealous police as of a cor-
rupt magistrates' system.
It itr my opinion that the intense
watchfulness and the uncompromising
ideals of the Chicago reformers may
have made ordinary police work dif-
ficult there. Their police chiefs halve
to play a hand in a game which is
never gentlemanly, with a crowd be-
hinds alling their carats, and watching
their sleeves carefully.
IN DEFENSE OF THE SPEND-
THRIFT
In his autobiography Calvin Cool-
idge pays his respects to those who
spend all they make. A friend of
mine recently related to me an ex-
perience with his bankers which re-
vealed they same attitude towards the
spendthrift. He had gone to his bank
for a small loan.
"What we oan't understarnd," one
of the bankers had said, "is what you
do with all your money, You make
lots of it. But you don't save it."
"But I don't wand to save money,"
he had explained. "1 herve no use for
money except to Spend it, I have to
desire to 'be rich. I would not own
this bank if I 'could. I want to enjoy
life, and I spend any enonay in ways
that make me do it."
AS PLEASANT TO TAKE
AS`SUGAR.
1
CONTAIN ,
116
NO NARCOTICS 'a
T1AROtUt5N IN
HEIR WORK
AN
Q
EFFICIENT
b PROMPT TO ACT
"Well, how do you spend it?" he
was asked.
"Oh--Imy family lives well, very
well. That costs money. We entertain.
We travel. We subscribe to many
things you would probably not think
worth while. We give our children
every opportunity, Sonne of which
might seem foolish to you, but we spee-
fer giving them these opportunities
to leaving them money." And them
lest they think him entirely -shiftless
he added; "Of course we keep up a
life insurance that can, take care of
our old age. We know we can cash in
our house and furniture and objects
d'art if necessary."
The hankers looked at the ceiling
At last one spoke: "Stocks and bonds
are collateral. You could borrow
money on them. ,You have no collat-
eral"
"But why should I need collateral?'
he asked. "I have a good and fairly
assured income for many more years
I have insurance in case of sickness
or death. And you know I pay my
bills."
"Oh, your moral credit is unim-
peachable. It is your financial credit
that is shaky. You don't save."
'For a moment, he told me, he 'saw
himself the prodigal son. Then sanity
returned. He said to himself: '`Every-
thing I buy is bought for a worthy
purpose. I eat no more than is nec-
essary. I work. hard. I play less than
most of my friends. I contribute to
the ,public weal. I give to those who
need it. No, I am not a prodigal. I
will not say: "Bankers, I have sin-
ned against m,oraiity and against
thee.'"
• What Vv impressed ed my friend at
this
s
conference was tihe emphasis laid on
his failure to save. "For one moment,
he told me, "I was tempted to say,
'The reason I earn so much more than
some of you is because I live as I
do., n
I knew that he was right. I had
discovered this for myself. The, ideal
of the money -savers is that of safety,
or of power. The ideal of safety is
easily apprehended. Safety means as-
surance against poverty, emergency,
worry. The ideal of power is equally
comprehensible. Power 1ns::ros one
against slavery. It also expands the
cg;: and lifts one above the mob.
My friend's ideal of the good life
may be called that of experience. And
since he loves beauty, what he choos-
es above all else to experience ere the
sensations he enjoys in the 1•.resence
of beauty. Beauty means to bin: a wel
ordered, dignified manner rf living
space to insure privacy. It called for
satisfaction of his mental needs by
means of hooks, companinnshi'p, tray
e•1, and by harmonious doo,esiic and
social relationships. And, mere im-
portant than all to him, the gratifica
tion of his spiritual •needs by th'e op-
portunity to practice generosity,
kindness, courtesy, and by n refusal
to accept the jungle mebhotlt, of alone•;
getting.
The fundamental difference hei,ween
such an idea of the good life and that
of the money -saver shoull be appar-
ent. One lives in the present, the other
in the future. One is devoted to com-
position, the other to self-protection.
One develops caution, the ether some-
thing of the gambling spirit.
Granted this ideal of exiareicncc,
the philosophy of life na:.n•at,!y fol-
lows. Never to seek safety 'trim sav-
ing, never to desire the bower of
wealth, but to get the fullest Pfc• pos-
sible out of what we have as we ge
along, to spend our earnings to grat-
ify our tastes and enlarge that ex-
perience.
I cannot claim that the acceptance
of it always makes for happiness,. To
live among people comm",ed to a
philosophy of wealth when peel arc•
planning a life without it is, to say
the least, difficult, The -bankers turned
down my friend because he wasn't'
playing the game as they l::rewv the
f•'en
Anel heree d�, i
would explain that he thought he was
e, to absolve m
playing the game of banking. Ile went
to the bank to purchase a loan as he
would go into a store to buy a hat, He
was willing to pay handsomely for 1
it, And they knew that he would re-
pay the principal. As he looks at it
banks go into business to make money
by lending. But my friend cannot see
why the hanker, simply beceuse he can
lend money, is, therefore, any more
virtuous than himself,
•
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WHY PAY MORE?
THE WILSON FLY PAD CO., Hamilton, Ont.
Yet it is logical that the two phiI-
osophies should produce el-ifferent
standards of value. I know a man who
started out to make money and has
made two million dollars, But in or-
der to do so he has been so compelled
to exalt the importance and care of
money that now he cannot see other
values. Try as he will to be generous,
the idea of profit will intrude. En-
deavor as he niay to play. he feels- a
sense of guilt that time is being wast-'
ed. Seek as he does to enjoy +r:e pos-
session of things, their finer points are
lost in their commercial value. The
philosophy of snein
b
has
brought g
ht hta
to
this.
What the philosophy of wealth get-
ting offers faithful savers everyone
knows. What the philosophy of the
sender offers him is not, apparently,
so well known, But he has his -reward.,
And not alone in the pleasures he de-
rives from a garden, furniture in a
home, and books in a library. But he
the thoughts, qualities, the eruptions .
it allows him which the go-getter must -
of necessity stifle as well as in the ex-
periences it permits. I can myself bear
witness to that. Oh, the things I could
not have done, the people I would nev-
er have known, the things T wcpld not.
have enjoyed, the places I would never-
have
everhave been, offering ever ,eider and
wider opportunities for thi-1gs to do,.
people to know, places to go, thoughts
to think, things to enjoy if I had note
adapted m• - philosophy! These seem
i to me so much more valuable than col-
lateral in a tin box.
Our philosc•phy, I acknoeviedge, has
its lead points. I do not ign, eo them.
If greed, avarice, meanness, stingi-
ness, selfishness, and uncharitableness
can develop out of the getting ahead
' philosophy, so can shiftlessness, lack.
cf rei'pnnsibility, self-indulgence and
selfishness, extravagance and proflig-
acy di'‘ slop from the extreme of -the -
experience ]thilosephy. It is hard tee
tread the happy mean, I am Well a-
ware :;f the importance of ties savers -
They are the builders of our physical!
world. Their cal ings it is t'.iac develop
industries, make commerce possible,
dran;e inventions, endow hospitals
nn•1 univer'.itit . Their estates in they
hands of the right kind of descend -
ante make poeelile a leisure that may
Se rich for the development of things
of the mind and spirit.
To appreciate one is not to discredit-
the other. To each man his own pal-
ace, his own method. The important
Thing would seam to be for each man:
to knew his awn nreth<xl. To wc,rk by'
any other, in fact, is imposa.blo
inviting on a warm day! A bowl
of crisp Kellogg's Corn Flakes
with milk or cream. How sen-
sible! For Kellogg's are extra
easy to digest. They really help
you feel
*Always oven4resh in the waxtite
inner sealed wrapper. At all groeers.
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